If this is your first visit, be sure to
check out the FAQ by clicking the
link above. You may have to register
before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages,
select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below.
So, what if you had 2 remotes...could make life kinda interesting for the rider if someone in the boat could operate the controls on the board
I was thinking the same thing.
I have the answer Surfdad. But James will have to re-learn some tricks, as my answer requires 1/2 a kick flip for the revert rotation.
Make the board top to bottom symetrical, then when you do half the kick flip, aka turn the board on its top, gravity and water pressure pull the fins out.
or you could use a windshield water detector (the kind that turn the windshield wipers on, to deploy the servos)
My orginal idea was to somehow mitigate the forward bias of the fin placement on the Walzer. I LOVE the way the Walzer rides, but when the board is revert, as it is after a shuv, the fin closest to the wake grabs and makes the shuv out very difficult. It's a little hard to see, but if you look closely at the bottom of the board, you can see the one fin is just grabbing the wake, in this picture.
This gives a quick view of the fin placement on our Walzer. They are about 13 inches apart and I believe close to 12 inches up from the tail.
The further up from the tail and the further out from the centerline of the board, the easier it is for the fin to grab the wake when ridden revert. The other extreme is to have a single fin along the centerline at the tail. The downside of that is that it reduces drive (down the line speed) and the tail doesn't feel as loose as when the fins are further up from the tail. IMO, a board feels more responsive or lively when the fins are moved forward.
I started out just wanting to try a board with different fin positions, such that we could test and see where the best location might be, then listening to all the "HYPE" from the folks in the Lost Surfboards/Placebo camp, I thought what the heck, let's try and quad and see if it really has any benefit.
I moved them further out towards the nose, which I think is going to make this board a little too "tight" or unresponsive, well at least when compared to the original Walzer. However, I'm hopeful that the placement of the fins will be such that it allows the board to be ridden revert without hanging up in the wake AND still allowing enough drive that aerials can be done.
I guess all that is missing is some warmer weather
This is a picture of the board revert with just the outside fins in place. With the fins in this location, there was little "hanging" in the wake. When the fins were switched to the inside boxes, they didn't hang at all.
Comment